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Re: Vaccines cannot be trusted
 
qualityoflife Views: 7,914
Published: 11 y
 
This is a reply to # 2,096,839

Re: Vaccines cannot be trusted


There are 120 types of HPV and the vaccine only addresses 4 of those types. Forty of the HPV viruses are spread through sexua| contact. The big kicker no one grasps is for the vaccine to maybe be effective, (according to the CDC) the woman/man must be free of the HPV virus; therefore, both people must be sexua| virgins. All you need to do is touch areas of someone's body and you are exposed because well over 75% of sexually active people have the HPV virus. So these sexually active girls who get the vaccine are not helping themselves and possibly stand the chance of severe side effects.

"It is not necessary to have intercourse to get HPV. Anyone who has sexua| contact with another person can get the HPV infection. HPV doesn’t discriminate based on sexua| preference; heterosexuals are just as likely to contract HPV. The highest rate of infection is among young adults aged 15 to 24. (The infection does not mean you will get cancer. This is how the medical community scares people.) The only people who are highly unlikely to have an HPV infection are those who have never been sexually active."

Certain types of HPV can cause genital warts but the warts do not cause cancer. In general, treatment for genital warts caused by HPV is aimed at making the immune system stronger so it can fight the HPV virus, or destroying the sores or warts that HPV may cause.

The way to prevent HPV is to limit sexua| partners, boost your immune system by exercising and eating healthy foods, no smoking and regular PAP smears. I looked at the CDC statistics for cervical cancer and found the Blacks and Hispanics have the highest rates because they don't get regular PAP smears.

"Older women,who are at particularly high risk of developing
cervical cancer, have very low screening rates. Women have many reasons for not getting their Pap tests. When asked why they are not getting their Pap tests, women across racial groups said they either “never thought about it,” “didn’t need it,” or that it was “too expensive."

“Nowhere is this failure of our health care system more apparent than in the disparities in cervical cancer incidence and outcome… suffered by members of particular racial and ethnic minority subgroups and other underserved populations... Cervical cancer (is) a disease for which effective prevention—not just early detection—and treatment have existed for decades.”

-Harold P. Freeman, M.D. National Cancer Institute, Center to Reduce Cancer Health Disparities (immediate past director)

http://www.say-something.org/disparities.pdf

 

 
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